The photos:
The front, with Sandy and I, was taken in
Madrid (mad - drid) New Mexico, between
Albuquerque and Santa Fe on the Turquoise Trail Highway. The Elk sign was near
Pie Town in southern New Mexico. R.F.T. serving the pies is of course the same
town and YES that is the real name of the town.
Now I am sending you the liner notes. I could
not believe how interesting they turned out to be. If you are not too busy
perhaps you will read them. Maybe. Maybe not. You never seem to follow my
rules.
#1 - My favorite on my 11th CD is
"Oh Mamacita" by Keith Frank. Mamacita means little mother. He plays Zydeco and is from
Louisiana. But this is border music, only the border is not Mexico, it is
Texas. We saw him again in Connecticut this past June. First he sings in
Spanish, then he sings the same line in English. It is really fun and easy to
dance to: Mr. Keith Frank and his Soil Eau Zydeco Band.
#2 - "Catch a Wave" is
actually one that six-year-old Abel picked. He was hooked on the Beatles, then
the Stones, and now the Beach Boys. They released this tune in 1963. Mike Love
sang it with a heavy head cold. When Jimmy Clanton sang "Just A Dream,"
he also had a bad cold. Listen to the cleaned up one. It is not as good in my
opinion. I came very close to graduating from high School that same year.
#3 - William Royce Scaggs from Plano
Texas. Started with the Steve Miller Band. We love Boz Scaggs.
#4 - "Back in the USA." - It
was written by Chuck Berry. Linda Ronstadt had a Mexican great grandmother. She
was raised in Tucson. It is in Arizona. We saw her All Mexican show in Great
Woods years ago. But the time we saw her up close was at South Shore Music
Circus. She did all her oldies and then most of her blues tunes, which she
really prefers. Did you ever see a photo of her when she was with the Stone
Ponies? Wow! She was born in 1946.
#5 - "Lola" - Pretty
interesting. One night when the Kinks were playing, their manager got involved
with a transvestite and danced with him/her all night in SoHo. Coca Cola
was changed to cherry cola because of the BBC regulations. Where were you in
June of 1970?
#6 - "Deportees" - Probably the last
real hit of Woody Guthrie. The story of the plane crash over Los Gatos Canyon
is 100 % true. "Good bye to my Juan, goodbye Rosalita. Adios mi amigos,
Jesus & Maria." We named one of our cats Rosalita because of this
song. We think a Marshfield coyote shortened her life. The other one’s name was
Arlo.
#7 - “Sister Golden Hair.” - 1975. Three
of America’s band members’ Moms were blondes.
#8 - "Como Ayer" - We paid
good money early to catch them at the big white tent near Pier 4 one summer,
and had next to the last row seats. I complained with a big smile. At the start
of the second half, we were escorted to Don Law's empty box seats. Originally
from Spain, the families left in the 1930s because of the Spanish Civil War and
ended up in France. They sing with an Andalusian accent.
#9 - "You Belong to Me" - It
seems Sandy and I raised our girls during all her music. Carly Simon wrote it
with Michael McDonald of the Doobie Brothers. Years ago, Sandy's friend waited
on James Taylor and Carly Simon at a restaurant near the Marshfield Fair and
didn't recognize them. Carly also wrote "Anticipation" while waiting
for Cat Stevens to visit her in her NYC apartment. Give me extra points for
that one, por favor. It was in her
book. The famous ketchup commercial ... remember?
# 10 - "I Just Want To Dance With
You." - Early results show that this was one of Tom Donovan's
favorites on this CD. The Cerris will be so excited to hear one by John Prine
again. Johnny Cash and Bob Dylan thought he was, and is, a terrific writer.
# 11 - "Cherry Bomb" has
almost made the list the last five times. "That’s when a smoke was a
smoke." It was the late 70's with Johnny Cougar Mellencamp.
# 12 - "Chatter Box." - It
is a restaurant in Eunice Louisiana on East Laurel Avenue. It is also a great
tune to dance to by Mr. Steve Riley, whose real first name is John by the way.
It is on their most recent album.
# 13 – “One More Cup of Coffee" is
to me a Mexican song by Bob Dylan and Emmylou Harris. Wrong, Kimo Sabe. It
turns out he wrote it in Provence, France in 1976. Long, long songs on that
album. Flaco & Carlos you are welcome. There again, Herman Melville
wrote Moby Dick in Pittsfield, and Truman Capote wrote Breakfast at Tiffany’s
in Duxbury Harbor on Clarks Island. William Clark was First Mate on the ship
Mayflower. But you knew that.
# 14 - "That’s Why I’m Here" – 1985. JT's 11th album. "Pay good money to hear
Fire & Rain again and again and again."
# 15 - "So Far Away" by
Mark Knopfler of Dire Straits. He is one of my favorites but I have yet to see him.
He just played with Bob Dylan at the Boston Garden.
# 16 - "Verlaine" - This was a
reach, but I first heard it in the movie "French Kiss." Have you ever
been French kissed? I mean REALLY French kissed. Louis Charles Auguste Claude
Trenet was born in 1913. He had a very interesting life that lasted for eighty
eight years.
# 17 - "Cafe Waltz" - By
David Greely from Mamou Playboys. That particular cafe is in Red Stick -- I
mean Baton Rouge. Isn't that fun to say, "I am from Baton Rouge."
David is 57 years old. He met Steve Riley when Steve was 18 years old at Mark
Savoy's store in Louisiana. The album is called Sud de Sud.
# 18 - "Cisco Kid " - From
1950 – 1956, the Cisco Kid show was on TV. His real name was Duncan Rinaldo.
Pancho was his sidekick. Pancho is short for Francis or Francisco.
Weird. YCMTSU. Eric Burdon of the Animals wrote it, along with "Spill
the Wine" and "Low Rider."
# 19 - “This City Never Sleeps.” - NYC right ? Well, Tel Aviv and Barcelona are
also called that. Singing is Annie Lennox of the Eurythmics. It was one of the
tunes in the movie "9 ½ Weeks." In 1986, it starred Mickey Rourke and
Kim Bassinger. It is an erotic film that cost $ 17 million to make and only
made $7 million. Sandy and I love the movie.
Quiz on Monday.
Sleep tight.
“Sleep tight” came from when you had no mattress
and slept on rope webbing in a wooden frame that worked better if it
wasn't sagging. So to get a good sleep, you would tighten the ropes. Never
mind, it is late.
Roberto Francisco Tocino
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